Thursday, January 9, 2014

More Specific Search Query Data from Google Webmaster Tools


 Google Webmaster Tools will now give more specific details about the number of imitation and clicks your site gets from search. Also, a new filter will be of exacting interest to those webmasters who have a lot of mobile traffic.

Here's a look at both of the announcements from Google.
 
No More Rounding of Search Queries
 
Previously, Google would simply round up feeling and click data. Sometimes Google was not just rounding to the nearest thousand, but to the nearest million, which can give webmasters an idea that their website might be doing better or worse than it really is.
 
Now Google is changing the way they display their search inquiry numbers in Google Webmaster Tools. You'll see the specific data right down to the individual click or impression.

Google hopes more exact data will make the information more actionable for webmasters. This will also help webmasters who have sites with a lot of "The change will be rolled out within the next few days and will display for those that have at least one page from their website displaying in Google's search results.

Mobile Search Queries Filter

Search query stats for both desktop and mobile will now be displayed in Google Webmaster Tools independently rather than being lumped together. Because users interact with websites differently depending on whether they are using a mobile device or a desktop, this can help webmasters decide problem areas or if there is something mobile users are searching for that might not be apparent otherwise.
 
Google also is displaying the mobile data when webmasters have utilized a "skip redirect" where a mobile user is being redirected to the good mobile page. This helps webmasters decide when a user saw a desktop page in the search results, but was redirected to the mobile page when they clicked on that result.
 
To switch between mobile and desktop search queries in Webmaster Tools, simply click on your search queries page, then select the suitable filter to display the different results for mobile and desktop.

Mobile is rising in importance. Traffic from mobile devices only continues to climb, so having more detailed mobile specific information regarding search queries will be really helpful.
 
If you're working on a mobile optimized sites, and don’t forget that Google has best practices for mobile optimized websites on their Building Smartphone-Optimized Websites page.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Mobile SEO Approach In 2014

 Adopting a victorious mobile SEO strategy in 2014 will certainly give your organization a competitive advantage. 

To underscore the significance of implementing a mobile SEO approach in 2014, a recent Mobile Path to Purchase Study performed by Nielsen on behalf of Google found that 74 percent of mobile users use a search engine during their purchase process, and that 83 percent of mobile users intend to make a purchase within a day.

Here are five important elements to ensure your mobile SEO success in 2014.

1. Focus on the Mobile User Experience

User knowledge is the single most significant factor for the success of a mobile SEO strategy in 2014. Even top retailers struggle with the mobile experience.

User experience impacts a site's skill to engage visitors, which we know has a direct impact on rankings. More significantly, it impacts a site's ability to make conversions. Therefore, ensuring your site provides mobile users with a great experience can develop your site's rankings, as 
well as its ability to engage and change visitors into customers.

As you continue reading, note that all of the important elements discussed tie back to user experience. Google is continually making strides to improve mobile user experience. A mobile SEO strategy that aligns with this goal will be more victorious than a strategy that focuses primarily on rankings and traffic.

2. Have a Mobile-Friendly Site

In 2014, a mobile-friendly site, whether responsive or committed, will be fundamental to a successful mobile SEO strategy. The development of mobile traffic is surging. According to the BrightEdge MobileShare Report, smartphone traffic improved 125 percent as compared to desktop growth, which increased only 12 percent.

However, desktop SEO will remain uniformly significant in 2014. This same study found that smartphone users transformed at only one-third the rate of desktop  users, and much of this has to do with poor smartphone user experience.

There remains a lot of debate as to which is better, a reactive or a dedicated mobile site. The truth is that there are pros and cons to both, and the answer is whichever option will best meet the needs of your customers.

3. Increase Mobile Page Load Speeds

Page load speeds can have a important impact on mobile user-experience and conversions. Based on research by the Nielsen Norman Group, Google wants mobile pages to load in one second or less to deliver a positive knowledge, and keep the user engaged. More than one second disrupts the users' flow of thought. According to Google, the average mobile page load speed today is over 7 seconds.

Because page load speed is crucial to creating a positive mobile user-experience, it is necessary to a successful mobile SEO strategy. While it isn't clear how much of a direct crash mobile page load speed has on rankings, Google is stressing its importance because of the impact on user experience, and what is good for user experience is good for rankings.

3. Incorporate Clean Design With a Focus on Usability

A site's design and usability can have a profound impact on its ability to engage and convert, particularly for mobile users who view websites on smaller screens. Providing information in an intuitive and easily digestible format, big buttons, and clear calls-to action will make a world of dissimilarity when it comes to a site's ability to engage and convert mobile-users.

Usability should trump design, and needless design elements should be eliminated. They will only make a site appear cluttered on mobile devices, and decrease page load speeds.

4. Understand Mobile-User Intent   

With the opening of Google's Hummingbird algorithm, understanding mobile user intent, conversational search queries, and voice search is necessary to a successful mobile SEO strategy in 2014.

An SEO strategy should always be guided by the needs and wants of your planned audience, and the needs and wants of mobile users are often different than that of desktop users.

5. Take informal & Voice Search Into Account

Understanding mobile-user intent also impacts the types of keyword phrases an SEO strategy should fit in. In 2014, it will no longer be enough to simply combine keywords with a site. Keywords will have to be considered in context as more mobile users utilize voice search and ask search engines exact questions.

For example, someone performing a voice search for a local dentist may ask their smartphone, “where is the nearest dentist?” as different to typing “dentist + location.” Since these search results are determined in large part based on the mobile user's location, an SEO strategy that promotes the dental office location and incorporates informal search terms within its content, may have an edge over competing dental offices in the same area.

Conclusion

While these five elements are essential to the success of mobile SEO in 2014, mobile SEO should no longer be considered divide from desktop SEO. Rather, they are two parts of a complete SEO strategy.

Consumers use multiple devices to research the products and services that interest them. An SEO strategy that allows consumers to find your products or services and provides a great user-experience, in any case of device, will be the best SEO strategy in 2014.

you might also like : Focus On Mobile SEO

Content Is The King

seo tips
 If there's one thing we heard ad nauseam in 2013 (and 2012, 2011, 2010...), it was that "content is king." Frankly, this phrase has been said so many times that it has lost its meaning. What exactly does that mean?

Content will continue to be a key part in SEO moving into 2014. I don't think that will ever adjust. But your strategy has to become accustomed if you're going to keep up.
Here are five ways to make sure your content will sustain in the New Year and move you past your competitors.

1. Marketing Automation to calculate It

We know, and clients know, you want good content, and for a while, that's all they wanted. But in 2014, clients will demand more than "8 blog posts published" as a KPI, and that's where marketing mechanization comes in.

For me, the benefit of a marketing automation platform like Pardot or HubSpot isn't in automating your tactics; it's in as long as a better way to report and measure how your content is working for you. You can see things like:

•    Content patterns: You can see if a user is only concerned in one topic, and only serve them content that matches their benefit.

•    Sales over leads: Syncing into a CRM, instead of showing clients leads your content brought, you show them sales.

2. Smarter, and individual, Content in Emails

Email marketing can be a huge enhancement to traffic and sales, but it demands creative content specially for that user: Those timeless clichés won't work anymore. You have to find a new approach.

3. Make It Available On the Move

In 2013, 63 percent of cell phone users used their phone to go online. That's doubled since 2009.

Google authorized responsive web design in 2012, and Google's Matt Cutts has lately stated responsive won't hurt your SEO, but the move to more mobile-friendly web experience brings to light a larger question with your overall content strategy.

We classify devices in three types: desktop, tablet, and mobile. But within those sections, you're at rest working against dozens of different screen sizes. Not all laptop screens were created uniformly, and the same goes for tablets and smartphones.

With most responsive design, when you scale to a smaller screen, the content on the right moves below the content on the left. But what happens when that piece of information on the left is a critical call to action? You don't want that at the bottom when it's on a dissimilar device.
You have to think about how your content will look on the dozens of different screen sizes your users use to read said content.

4. Separate Content From Link Building

For most, 2013 was the year that "content marketing" replaced "link building." If Google Trends is any signal, that will continue into 2014.

unhappily, that's not how we should look at content. If you're writing content for the sole purpose of building links, you're doing it wrong. Content – and content marketing – is a part of link building, but they're not interchangeable.
In 2014, write content for the purpose of educating and informing, not manipulating and profiting. And when it get links, it'll be even better.

5. Small Tastings Mixed With Larger Portions

A couple of years' back, we wrote a lot of content on one page because it was better at attracting search engines. In 2013, we wrote 1,500-word plus blog posts because users wanted to sink their teeth into it; the more in-depth your content, the more likely people will share it.

Summary

The key thing to keep in mind is content isn't going anywhere, not in 2014 and not ever. It's just getting modified to fit what your users want and how they're accessing it.

Monday, January 6, 2014

Why It’s essential to identify Your Promoted Social Media viewers

 Often times, a company might focus on a few ads, and then distribute those across all social networks with the same messaging and graphics.  But all networks are not shaped equally.  There are things that work on Facebook that just don’t float on Linkedin. 

Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn offer their business users the ability to promote their posts or create whole ad campaigns to promote transversely the network.  But all three networks have different demographics and ways that people digest their information.  Therefore, a silver bullet ad just won’t work across all three. Here are the differences, with advice for each.
 
Keep it short, funny, and contextual.  People respond on Twitter to tweets that are attractive and evoke emotion.  I’ve seen tweets from companies that have been hilarious, touching, and anger-inducing.  However, when companies pay to have a tweet promoted, their skill to evoke emotion seems to fall to the wayside.  When a company is looking to get revelation with their organic tweets, they work hard to make the tweet engaging.  

But when the tweet is guaranteed to receive that exposure, they get lazy and just cram an ad into the tweet. Don’t succumb to this shortcut.  Regardless of whether a tweet is promoted or organic, it should engage your audience and induce some type of emotional response from your followers or target demographic.  Tweets that evoke passion or create ties to what the user is experiencing at that moment are much more likely to be shared or retweeted.

 LinkedIn
 
If you’re advertising for a B2B product, then LinkedIn is the way to go in many cases.  However, also appreciate that the people you’re targeting on Linkedin are being solicited by many dissimilar sources.  Whether it’s the salesperson, recruiter, or service provider that is trying to earn their business, Linkedin can often feel like the floor of a sales convention to some of its users.  So avoid being too promotional with your ad. 

Linkedin users digest a lot of news stories from their news feeds.  With the purchase of Pulse earlier this year, Linkedin has thrown their hat into the news sharing business.  This provides an opportunity for businesses to attract attention to their offerings by positioning the promotional material as a news story.  

Write a thought maddening story that really works to promote your offering in a natural and newsworthy way.  Then, post an update to the story and promote that update.  If the title is engaging and the story has value, you’ll find a great conversion rate with this method.

Example of a LinkedIn Pulse article that is both informative and promotional.
 
If you want to really take full advantage of Facebook ads, then you have to look to the newsfeed.  Facebook recently opened up the prime real estate of the newsfeed to advertisers, and the results have been remarkable.  Previously, click through rates on left sidebar ads were in the low single digit percentiles… if you were lucky.  However, with the larger images and message that is allowed in the newsfeed, CTRs of double digits are possible

Take advantage of the space that Facebook gives you.  Design a gorgeous ad and write great copy to go along with it.  What’s great about ads on Facebook is that if your targeted audience likes or shares the ad, it’s then disseminated through their network and you receive extra advertising for free.
 
Because of this, you should try to make your ads as “viral” as possible.In summary, examine the demographics of each social network and the way that their users digest information.  Then make a marketing strategy that focuses on each network individually. 

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Link building techniques in 2014

 Most importantly, and contrary to what you may have heard, link building is far from dead. Many of the "link building is dead" theories are ingrained in wishful thinking and/or fear. The fear is real and understandable as the Penguin update at last delivered on Google's long running promise to severely penalize websites engaged in manipulative link schemes.

The Google Reaper

Some have fulfilled that the best and safest response to Penguin is to stop link building altogether. That's a bad idea.

Here's a reality check: the best way to recover visibility in the SERPs, in 2014, is still link building. Links are still believed to be the most significant part of the algorithm, according to the most recent Moz search engine ranking factors survey.

The main takeaway is this: Link building is still the key to more visibility in organic search. If your purpose is to improve visibility in organic search, then invest in resources accordingly. Social media and authorship may  impact the SERPs at some point in the future, but not today and maybe not significantly in 2014.

Relevance is the New PageRank

The growth of the original 1 link = 1 vote algorithm took a quantum leap forward in May 2012 with the introduction of the Knowledge Graph, which is used by Google to deliver search results with semantic-search information. This information is gathered from a wide variety of sources, using more than 500 million objects and 3.5 billion details. In Googlespeak, the Knowledge Graph is about "things, not strings."

It's quite credible that Knowledge Graph is baked into Hummingbird, the latest Google algorithm. Assuming that's the case, then a connection between "context, not anchor text" and "things not strings" is applicable. Relevance is the new PageRank when searching for linking opportunities.

A real life example could look something like this: Pre-Hummingbird, a search for car covers might yield results crack among auto accessories to protect your car, tribute bands that cover the classic rock group "The Cars" and songs enclosed by Ric Ocasek and the cars. The "old" algo couldn't distinguish one car cover from another. Hummingbird, on the other hand knows the difference. Now, all of those auto parts links coming from high PR band sites, are now showing for what they really are: unnatural. At best the link is devalued. At worst it triggers a physical review.

Link Schemes vs. Link Building

Understanding the variation between link scheming and link building is critically significant in 2014. For webmasters who were doing SEO before Panda, this can be particularly difficult to navigate.

Many have been directly impacted by the Google paradox. Unlike the Einstein theory of insanity, in the Google Paradox, SERPs really do yield different results after doing the same thing (spammy link building) over and over again.
A link scheme that scored number one rankings in 2010 can and will draw a manual or algorithmic punishment, today. That paradox has driven many a webmaster nuts!
According to Google, the following actions are link scheming – not link building:
 
•    Buying or selling links that pass PageRank
 
•    Using automatic programs or services to create links to your site
 
•    Linking to a site for the sole purpose of getting a link back
 
•    Building a link networking for the point of linking
 
•    Large-scale article marketing or guest posting using keyword-rich anchor text
 
•    Buying advertorials or articles that include links that pass PageRank
 
•    Creating & Distributing Press releases with optimized anchor text
lately removed from the guidelines, but still likely to trigger a penalty:
 
•    Linking to web spammers or unrelated sites with the intent to manipulate PageRank
 
•    Links that are inserted into articles with little coherence
 
 Secure Ways to Build Links in 2014
 
 •    Focus external link building efforts on the gaining of editorially given links. These are links requiring human interference and approval.
 
•    Build links that are relevant – on pages where the readers would have a genuine attention in your website.
 
•    Quality trumps quantity. A few links from high trust/authority websites will have more crash than hundreds of links from "Made for Guest Posting" blogs.
There are no more short cuts to link building. The process is hard and time intense. In 2014, it's time to spend the time and the money to do it right so you can stop fearing the Google reaper.

You might also like: Link Building Things To Be appreciative For 2013


Friday, January 3, 2014

Most important Google Changes expose the expectations of SEO

 Google is doing a brilliant job of pushing people away from planned SEO behavior and toward a more planned approach.

Here's a look at the major developments, some of Google's initiatives driving this change, and the overall impact these changes will have on SEO.

1. '(Not Provided)'

Google made the move to make all organic searches secure early September 23. This means we've lost the capability to get keyword data for users arriving to our websites from Google search.

Losing Google keyword data is sad for a number of reasons. These impacts publishers in many ways, including losing a valuable tool for understanding what the intent of customers that come to their site, for change optimization, and much more.
For planned SEO efforts, it just means that keywords data is harder to come by. There are ways to work around this, for now, but it just won't be quite as simple as it used to be.
 
2. No Page Rank Update Since February

Google has updated the PageRank numbers shown in the Google Toolbar every 3 months ago or so, but those numbers haven't been updated while February. This means 8 months have gone by, or two updates have been skipped.
In addition, Google's famous Engineer Matt Cutts has said Toolbar PageRank won't be updated again this year, most important many to speculate that PageRank is going away. I won't miss it because I don't look at PageRank often and I normally don't have a Google toolbar in my browser.

There are a small number of elements to Google's Hummingbird algorithm, announced in time for Google's official birthday, but like Caffeine before it, this is really a major platform transform. Google has built a capability to understand conversational search queries much better than before.

For example, submit a query to Google such as "show me pictures of Fenway Park", and it does:

Then you can chase that query with this one: "who plays there", and you get this result:

Both of these show conversational search at work .Hummingbird really changes the keyword game rather a bit. Over time, exact keyword matches will no longer be such a big deal.
 
4. Google+


While it seemed to get off to a slow start at first, many argue that it has developed a lot of momentum, and is growing quickly. The data on Google+'s market share is pretty hard to parse, but there are some clear impacts on search, such as the display of modified results:

In addition, you can also see posts from people on Google+ show up in the results too. This is true even if you do your search in "incognito" mode:

And, while I firmly consider that a link in a Google+ share isn't treated like a regular web link, it seems likely to me that it does have some SEO value when joint with other factors.

How Google+ fits into this picture is that it was built from the ground up to be a content sharing network that helps with establishing "identities" and "semantic relevance". It does this quite well, and in spite of what you might read in some places, there is a ton of action in all kinds of different verticals on Google+.

OK, authorship also isn't new but it is a part of a bigger picture. Google can use this to connect new pieces of content with the person who wrote it.
Over time, this data can be potentially used to measure which authors write substance that draw a very strong response (links, social shares, +1s, comments) and give them a higher "Author Rank".

We won't look into into the specifics of how Author Rank might work now, but you can read "Want to Rank in Google? Build Your Author Rank Now" for my thoughts on ways they could look at that.

That said, in the future you can imagine that Google could use this as a ranking signal for queries where more complete articles are likely to be a good response. Bottom line: your personal authority matters.

I also should mention Publisher Rank, the concept of building a site's authority, which is perhaps more important. Getting this payoff depends on a holistic approach to building your authority.

The Google announcement included a statement that "up to 10% of users' daily information needs engage learning about a broad topic." That is a pretty big number, and I think over time that this characteristic will become a pretty big deal. Effectively, this is an entirely new type of way to rank in the SERPs.

This increases the payoff from Author Rank and Publisher Rank – there is a lot to be gained by developing both of these, assuming that Google actually does make it a ranking factor at some point. Note that I wrote some thoughts on how the role of in-depth articles could evolve.

The focus now is on accepting your target users, producing great content, establishing your authority and visibility, and given that a great experience for the users of your site. Properly architecting your site so that the search engines can understand it, including using schema and related markup, addressing local search , and work of this type still matters, too.

But, the obsession with tactical items like PageRank and keywords is going to weaken away. As Google tweaks the way their service operates, and look for ways to capture new signals, they do things that of course push you in that direction. It isn't going to stop. Expect more of the same going forward.

you might also like : SEO For 2014

Thursday, January 2, 2014

Google Hummingbird reactive Content marketing instructions

 The Google Hummingbird algorithm restore has been a hot topic of late. There are literally hundreds of blog posts and articles analyzing accurately what Hummingbird is, why it was engineered in the first place, and how to adjust reporting and client expectations when keywords hold far less weight than they once did.

Rather than rehash the ideas of others or take more stabs in the dark at what Hummingbird is, this post aims to overview several types of content that are more likely to be Hummingbird-friendly. Realistically, if you have followed Google’s direction and focused on generating quality content, you are already in front of the game.

Types of Content That Are Hummingbird Friendly

Not all quality content is created equally. If you are building outstanding materials but they only focus on you, your products/services, or some other self-serving objective, you are choosing to limit your exposure.

On the other hand, even some tried and true content types may fail to rank as well as they did previously. That said, if Google is truly starting to rank content based on user search intent and context of the content itself, several specific types of content stand out. Let’s take a look at what might work well in today’s SEO environment.
 
Evergreen content

“Evergreen” refers to content which does not have a shelf life or expiration date. Whereas breaking news is only of interest for a short period of time, evergreen content provides in sequence that is applicable to online searchers well into the future.

The beauty of evergreen content is that it only grows stronger in authority, ranking, and traffic over time. You will know when you’ve crafted a great piece of evergreen content by the stats. If you have content that has grown legs of its own, keep it updated on the same URL or redirect to the updated version. This sort of material earns its own links, provides real value, and will get you the eyeballs you are seeking for your site.

Even more significantly, evergreen content provides a great way for Google to rank according to context. Something that has ranked well over time has been crawled repeatedly, and as algorithms are tweaked and improved, this same content has a golden opportunity to remain visible with the latest Hummingbird objectives.
 .
Educational Content / How to’s

Since Hummingbird aims to rank more related content for natural questions and queries, the logical first place to turn is educational content, including “How to…” types of materials.
When building this content, be sure not to confuse the related query by using too much jargon or obscure titles. Consider the following two potential subject lines for a new blog post:

•    “Slingshots and Trajectory: Experiments in Distance”

•    “How to Build a Killer Slingshot Using Common Household Items”

These two subject lines could easily be titles for the exact same blog post… or two completely dissimilar posts. Now think about Hummingbird – which of the two is most likely to match to a question on the topic?


1.    They tend to focus on company-specific questions

2.    They are naturally all represented on a single page as a list of questions with answers

3.    FAQ pages are notoriously weak at earning natural links

In other words, a typical FAQ page is more likely to rank for “company name FAQ” than for the content in any of the questions. But there is a way about that challenge.

When building your FAQ, make a separate page or blog post that answers each of the questions. Then link directly to that page or post using the question itself as secure text. Not only will this offer you with a dedicated page to rank for the query / question, but it will also allow you to deploy an internal link with rich anchor text.
If you are willing to restore your idea of what an FAQ page is, there is unclaimed value to be had.


Problem / Solution
 
Another way to aim semantic / intent based queries is to adopt a problem / solution format. In this case, the key is to spell out the problem in very clear language. This will make the context that Google needs to match open queries against the answer you spell out in the rest of the document.

Social / Viral resources
 
Although still a work in progress, it is very clear that Hummingbird is a step along the path to figuring out social SEO signals. This should come as no shock if you’ve been following Google’s actions the past 2-3 years. They have clearly stated that they have to figure out a way to analyze social signals.

What does this mean? The social media-based answer you get to any piece of content is poised to play a role in the context that Google assigns to that content. This can be calculated by way of shares, comments on the posting of the content, likes / +1’s, and a list of other actions.

If you have fallen into lazy habits such as broadcasting marketing spam on social networks, start re-evaluating your behavior now. It could be months or over a year before Google figures out how to handle social signals. Don’t wait until they do so to clean up your act. It could be too late by then.
 
Top Tips  
 
Top tips describe something we see with blog content all the time. A quick look at Twitter will reveal a litany of “Top 3 Ways to…” and “4 Marketing plans to Avoid” types of posts.
This format naturally lends itself to Q&A matching. Rather than just saying what to avoid, focus the title on the real reason(s) to accept or avoid the suggested actions.

Instead of the example above, try something like “4 Marketing Tactics That Can Lose You Customers”. The reader can easily surmise that it is best to avoid those tactics, and you are again calling out the context clearly and overtly.
In-depth Analysis

With the introduction of in-depth articles as a hub for Google earlier this year, they have made it clear that in-depth analysis is highly valued. I see the same thing with my own blog posts and other content – research and detailed analyses do very well for SEO purposes.

Data has always been a good way to get eyeballs and usual links. That remains true today.
Research and data are poised to have continued success without missing a step. This type of content approximately always answers a question, or at least draws an insightful conclusion. Regardless of which approach you prefer, the end result is the same – data and in depth analysis addresses unanswered questions.

You can conduct surveys, assimilate data from disparate sources, or give information about tests you have fielded directly. All of these make new answers to existing problems. This is exactly the type of content that Hummingbird favors.
 
Summary

The bottom line on all of this is to keep creating quality content, and start view more about how you will offer context to help Google better rank it for open questions. Of course, as the social signals part evolves, we will see a whole new range of recommendations you can adopt.

For now, be sure all of your original content comes with Author Markup, and start taking social more dangerously if are not already doing so. These two items, while not yet key pieces of the Google ranking algorithm, are poised to play a major role in the coming years.